Lusaka, Zambia, May 24 –
At the 51st
Annual meeting of the board of governors of the African Development
Bank (AfDB), African philanthropist Tony Elumelu, urged the private
sector to tackle unemployment among African youths on the continent.
Mr.
Elumelu, the Chairman of United Bank for Africa (UBA) and pan-African
investment company Heirs Holdings said during a panel session at the
event on
Jobs for African Youths that “The solution to the problem of
unemployment is going to come first from within and then from all of us
working collectively. I believe entrepreneurship can solve the problem
of job creation.”
Other speakers at this session include H.E. Professor Yemi Osinbajo,
Vice President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; H.E Hailemariam Desalegn,
Prime Minister of the Republic of Ethiopia; Akinwunmi Adesina, President, African Development Bank; Carlos Lopes, Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa; Mo Ibrahim,
Founder of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation and Thomas Silberhorn, Parliamentary State Secretary, Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development(BMZ).
Mr.
Elumelu charged the audience and co-panelists: “If we are serious about
cultivating jobs, let Africans who want to help deal with this issue.
The Tony
Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Programme (TEEP), is my
foundation’s 10-year, $100 million commitment to empowering the next
generation of African entrepreneurs and surely, there are more private
sector leaders that are willing to invest in our continent’s
future.”
“I
see great entrepreneurship potential in many of the 45,000 applicants
that applied for TEEP this year alone, but the level of training,
mentoring and
networking that we offer means that we can only select 1,000 each year.
I call on everyone here to support those who missed the cut. This is a
clear path to sustaining African economic growth.”
Also contributing to the panel discussion, the AfDB president, Akinwunmi Adesina, noted that Africa has a job crisis.
“Unemployment
rate is a crisis. Africa is in a job crisis. I believe the solution is
right here in Africa” Akinwunmi, who is also Nigeria’s immediate former
Minister of Agriculture, emphasized that the future of Africa lies in a
more “prosperous and inclusive Africa.”
The
panelists were focused not only on creating jobs for the youths but
also harnessing the skills available on the continent to ensure good use
is made
of the natural resources available. Thomas
Silberhorn wants the world to take note of the fact that “$150bn worth
of goods is exported each year outside the continent(of
Africa) which is much more than the aid given” as Elumelu opined that
“International Aid organisations need to re-evaluate the way they engage
Africa in the 21st century”.
According to Mo Ibrahim “We are wonderful at wasting natural resources. The same way we waste our youth. We send our natural resources overseas where they add no value until they are refined’. In support of this, Lopez added that “African migrants, if properly trained, can return to the continent to add value just like the entrepreneurs being trained by the Tony Elumelu Foundation”.
“Young people need a helping hand, the kind that will make them self- reliant and self- confident so that they can add their quota to the development of the continent” said Tony Elumelu. He commended the AfDB for launching the New Deal on Energy for Africa initiative.
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